2013
DOI: 10.1177/1329878x1314900105
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Social Media Use during Japan's 2011 Earthquake: How Twitter Transforms the Locus of Crisis Communication

Abstract: This article explores social media use during Japan's 2011 earthquake. In the era of social media, this earthquake provides an opportunity for analysing the role of communication during a crisis. To explain how social media use transforms the locus of crisis communication, we collected sufficient data on tweets in Japan from the Twitter public timeline during the earthquake and examined the Japanese government's Twitter account and its URLs. The results indicate that crisis communication on Twitter was led by … Show more

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Cited by 114 publications
(91 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
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“…Social networks have been defined as ‘online venues for information sharing and social communication, where users create public profiles, interact with friends, and connect with other users’ (Masedu et al, , p. 1). Although social media is currently used in combination with traditional measures, during many recent extreme events it has actually been preeminent, broadcasting vital information before mainstream media (Murthy and Longwell, ; Cho et al, ; Abedin et al, ; Huang and Xiao, ; Takahashi et al, ). Furthermore, social media has become significantly instrumental in diminishing the communication gap between emergency services and individuals located in inaccessible areas during the aftermath of a disaster (Ehnis and Bunker, ; Cho et al, ; Neubaum et al, ; Takahashi et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Social networks have been defined as ‘online venues for information sharing and social communication, where users create public profiles, interact with friends, and connect with other users’ (Masedu et al, , p. 1). Although social media is currently used in combination with traditional measures, during many recent extreme events it has actually been preeminent, broadcasting vital information before mainstream media (Murthy and Longwell, ; Cho et al, ; Abedin et al, ; Huang and Xiao, ; Takahashi et al, ). Furthermore, social media has become significantly instrumental in diminishing the communication gap between emergency services and individuals located in inaccessible areas during the aftermath of a disaster (Ehnis and Bunker, ; Cho et al, ; Neubaum et al, ; Takahashi et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The routine usage of social media in everyday life has led to public expectation that emergency services and local authorities will communicate via social media during natural disasters (Meaton and Stringer, ). Members of the public increasingly rely on official agency social media accounts as a platform for accessing key information, seeking assistance, and subsequently sharing relevant disaster information with family and friends (Cho et al, ; St. Denis et al, ). Consequently, the rapid expansion of social media channels is fundamentally changing how organisations assemble and convey disaster information (Zhang et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…La Webometría se centra en la medición de sitios web, páginas web, palabras en las páginas web, hipervínculos y resultados en motores de búsqueda (Thelwall, 2009). Este método ha sido utilizado para rastrear patrones de comunicación en Twitter relacionados con desastres naturales (Cho, Jung y Park, 2013), política (Yoon & Park, 2014), y entretenimiento (Yoon & Park, 2013), entre otros temas.…”
Section: Recopilación De Datos Y Técnicas De Análisisunclassified
“…During a 2011 earthquake in Japan, the public leveraged Twitter to coordinate relief actions independent of the government (Cho, Jung, & Park, 2013). Thus, Twitter empowers publics to completely ignore and circumvent formal communication from government authorities, corporations, and other organizations.…”
Section: Twitter Usage During a Crisismentioning
confidence: 99%